
Developing Countries & WTO
Trade has a necessary but not solely sufficient role to play in helping
developing countries to grow. The DTI works on trade and
development in:
·
Special and Differential Treatment in the WTO
·
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD)
·
Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) including Cotonou
·
The Generalised System of Preferences (GSP)
·
Commodities and Fair trade
·
EU Free Trade Agreements (FTAs)
Development issues in the WTO
Implementation
In the run up to the WTO Ministerial in Seattle, a number of developing
countries tabled proposals to tackle what they saw as the
imbalances in the outcome of the Uruguay Round. Although
many of the proposals tabled involve changes to existing
Agreements, which would necessarily require re-negotiation,
they were tabled under the heading of implementing the outcome
of the Uruguay Round and have therefore been referred to
ever since as the "implementation" proposals.
Post-Seattle, more issues were added until well over a hundred separate
proposals were under discussion. Although a few proposals
were agreed in the summer of 2001, it was only at the WTO
Ministerial in Doha where substantial progress was made.
Nearly fifty proposals were addressed in the Doha Ministerial
Decision on Implementation-Related
Issues and Concerns, either agreed outright
or subject to some specific further work. The Doha Declaration
(paragraph 12) remitted the other fifty or so proposals
to WTO committees for further work.
Special and Differential Treatment (SDT)
Special and Differential Treatment is the term used for the way in
which developing countries are treated differently to developed
countries within the WTO system.
Examples of Special and Differential Treatment include giving developing
countries longer time periods than developed countries in
which to implement WTO Agreements, providing technical assistance
to developing countries to implement specific WTO Agreements
and providing preferential market access (through such schemes
as the Generalised System of Preferences or the Everything
But Arms initiative) which is non-reciprocal and available
to many developing countries but not to developed countries.
The Doha Ministerial (in paragraph 44 of the Ministerial Declaration,
cross-referenced to paragraph 12(i.-iii.) of the Ministerial
Decision on Implementation-Related
Issues and Concerns) mandated further work
on Special and Differential Treatment, specifically a review
of existing provisions with a view to strengthening them
and making them more precise, effective and operational.
Technical Assistance and Capacity-Building (TRCB)
The Doha Ministerial stressed the importance of technical assistance
and capacity building for developing countries
in order to ensure that developing countries can participate
fully in the WTO and take full advantage of the opportunities
offered to them by their membership of the WTO.
Post-Doha, the WTO Secretariat prepared and WTO Members have agreed
a Technical Assistance Plan for 2002, which is intended
to begin addressing developing countries' concerns. The
Plan includes such activities as visits by members of the
WTO Secretariat and regional seminars on WTO issues. Much
of the work being carried out under the Technical Assistance
Plan is funded by contributions made at a Pledging Conference
on 11 March 2002 to the Doha Development Agenda Global Trust
Fund (DDA GTF). The UK pledged £1m to the DDA GTF at this
conference.
More broadly, the UK has committed £45m to trade-related
technical assistance and capacity building activities.
TRIPS and Public Health
In the run up to Doha, the issue of access to medicines emerged as
a trade issue, given concerns in some quarters that the
WTO Agreement on Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights
(the TRIPS Agreement) was raising the prices of medicines
available to developing countries.
At Doha, agreement was reached on a Declaration on the TRIPS
Agreement and Public Health, in which WTO
Ministers agreed that the TRIPS Agreement neither does nor
should prevent WTO Members from taking measures to protect
public health and affirmed that the TRIPS Agreement can
and should be interpreted and implemented in a manner supportive
of WTO Members' right to protect public health and to promote
access to medicines for all. Moreover, the Declaration reaffirmed
the right of WTO Members to use, to the full, the flexibilities
within the TRIPS Agreement for this purpose.
Beyond this, WTO Ministers also instructed the TRIPS Council to find
a solution to the problems faced by WTO Members with insufficient
or no manufacturing capacities in the pharmaceutical sector
in making effective use of compulsory licensing under the
TRIPS Agreement.
Intellectual Property Rights and Development
Following publication of the White Paper of December
2000 entitled Eliminating World Poverty - Making Globalisation
Work for the Poor, the Government set up a Commission
to investigate the issues relating to intellectual property
rights and development more generally. The Commission reported
in September 2002 and the Government response was published
in May 2003. Both the Commission's report, entitled Integrating
Intellectual Property Rights and Development Policy
and the Government's response to that report can be accessed
on the DFID
website.
Trade Debt and Finance
At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed that the WTO would
set up a working group to examine the relationship between
Trade, Debt and Finance and to report findings to the Fifth
Session of the Ministerial Conference.
Issues relating to Trade, Debt and Finance cover several policy areas
and fall under the mandate of different institutions. The
key role of the WTO in this is to ensure coherence and promote
information exchange.
The U.K. is supportive of this initiative but is keen to ensure that
the group concentrate on coherence across international
body agreements.
Transfer of Technology
At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed that the WTO would
set up a working group to examine the relationship between
Trade and Transfer of Technology and to report findings
to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.
Technology transfer has been an issue in some parts of the WTO (such
as TRIPS), and before that in the GATT and in a great many
other international negotiations (especially environmental
negotiations) for many years. The key issue is essentially
the difference of approach to technology transfer taken
by developed and developing countries. Some see technology
transfer as taking place implicitly through routine trade
relations, and especially through foreign direct investment
(FDI) - countries should therefore create the conditions
in which FDI can take place (stable regulatory environment,
intellectual property protection etc) and technology will
follow trade. Others would prefer a more explicit approach
with companies being pushed into transferring technology
(rather than pulled to a suitable location for FDI) on concessional
terms. How we bridge this gap is the key to a positive outcome.
Small economies
At the Doha Ministerial it was agreed to establish a work programme
to examine issues relating to the trade of small economies
with the intention of promoting fuller integration of small,
vulnerable economies into the multilateral trading system.
The work programme on small economies will be a standing item on
the General Council agenda and recommendations for action
are to be made to the Fifth Session of the Ministerial Conference.
Least Developed Countries (LDCs)
The Doha Ministerial instructed the sub committee for Least Developed
Countries to report on an agreed work programme. This was
presented to the General Council in February 2002 and commits
the Committee to focus on:
- Market
access;
- Trade
related technical assistance and capacity building;
- Providing
support to agencies assisting with diversification;
- Mainstreaming
trade;
- Participation
of LDCs in the multilateral trading system:
- Accession
of LDCs to the WTO; and
- Follow
up to Ministerial decisions/declarations.
The
UK is also party to a number of other non WTO initiatives
aimed at promoting better integration of developing countries
into the world trading system.
For further information on any of the above areas please contact:
Emma Squire
Tel. 020 7215 6017
Fax. 020 7215 2235
E-mail. emma.squire@dti.gsi.gov.uk
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